Month: August 2009

10/10 people. You know the types of people. Always confident, on top of things, with high self worth and amazingly popular. Wouldn’t it be nice to be one of those?

This course will take you to where you go – and then signpost where you could go next. It is intended as a first stage on a journey that will take you towards the Powerchange aim of providing you with a life that you are proud to own. Powerchange is a personal development organisation with a vast array of tools and resources, all designed to take you to where you want to be.

How do you know if you need this course?

We suspect that you will just know. But the following questions may give you an insight.

> Are you using your talents to their best advantage?

> Do you feel put upon – or put down – at work?

> Is work simply not working?

> Do you feel held back from becoming the successful person that you
know you are inside?

> Do you blame other people for your lack of success?

> Would you like to restore your confidence and sense of self-worth?

If the answers to the above are generally ‘yes’, then please continue. This could be a life-changing moment.

At each stage there will be a question to answer and some options. There are no ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ answers, just honest ones. The answer you give will trigger a response from Powerchange – and this in turn will re-shape your thinking and take you on towards the next stage.

If at any stage you would like to talk to the course author Roy Stannard I can be emailed on roy@powerchange.com

Adorable were one of the pre-Oasis bands on Alan McGee’s Creation label. Hailing from Coventry in 1991, they consisted of Piotr (Pete) Fijalkowski (vocals, guitar), Robert Dillam (guitar), Steven ‘Wil’ Williams (bass), and Kevin Gritton (drums).

Apart from one of the best guitar rock bands ever, there is an additional element of interest for me in that Pete Fijalkowski is now based in Brighton and plays local pub gigs including The Wheatsheaf.

After recording a 12” of “Sunshine Smile” (b/w “I’ll Be Your Saint” and “Breathless”) that was pressed to be released on record producer Pat Collier’s ‘Money To Burn,’ label the band signed to Creation Records in 1992, and after a UK tour supporting Curve they released their first single, a re-recording of “Sunshine Smile,” in May of that year.

“Sunshine Smile” was NME’s Single of the Week, and topped the Indie Singles chart as well as entering the mainstream UK single top 100 charts for three weeks. A backlash in the press against the band’s outspoken image immediately followed, and the band weren’t ever interviewed in the mainstream UK press after their debut single. The band released “I’ll Be Your Saint,” “Homeboy” and “Sistine Chapel Ceiling” (NME single of the Week), which all went into the Top 5 in the Indie charts, but failed to enter the mainstream Top 75.

Their masterpiece – the album Against Perfection, released in 1993, went to #70 in the album charts, and the band toured the USA, Europe, Australia & Japan.

The second album, Fake, could be perceived as more insular, which Fijalkowski himself suggests was the result of the band feeling vulnerable. Creation was reviewing their contract and Pete himself admits in the Cherry Red release of their best work ‘Footnotes’ that he was expecting to be dropped at any time (Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine – got the courtesy of a phone call from Alan McGee, Adorable didn’t). The album does contain two of their best songs – Submarine and Road Movie – but whilst two singles (“Kangaroo Court” & “Vendetta” – see below) again entered high in the Indie Singles chart, the album didn’t trouble the mainstream Top 75 – and strained relations both within the band and with Creation resulted in the band announcing their split onstage in Brussels in late 1994.

In subsequent years, the band has been re-classified as being part of the shoegaze movement. However, the poetry of the lyrics and romanticism present in much of the songwriting makes this a misnomer. ‘A to Fade In’ remains one of the finest paeans to the fleeting nature of fame and the human condition ever written. Pete went on to form Polak and bands such as Ash & Oasis have acknowledged their admiration of the band.

Subsequent to the band’s demise Robert Dillam moved to Scotland where he joined The Zephyrs, whilst Fijalkowski went on to form the band Polak, who signed to One Little Indian Records.

A few years ago he was selling second hand books on the beach in front of Brighton’s crumbling West Pier. Noel Gallagher is a millionaire several times over.

To enhance your listening pleasure and to rehabilitate Fijalkowski’s place in the annals of Rock I give you the following download of ‘Against Perfection’ and the singles ‘Kangaroo Court’ and ‘Vendetta’ – the latter being deleted and therefore impossible to find.